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Fourth-generation Iowa farmer Mark Mueller is no stranger to the ups and downs of the agriculture industry. But right now, he thinks America is on the cusp of a farm crisis.

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“I am more concerned now than I have been in my 30 years of farming,” Mueller told NBC News.

Even before the Iran war, Mueller said, many farmers felt they were being squeezed. Consolidation in the fertilizer industry and increased competition from abroad have resulted in higher prices for fertilizer and feed — and smaller returns on Mueller’s corn and soybean crops.

Many farmers who couldn’t pay their bills in recent years went under. In 2025, the number of Chapter 12 farm bankruptcies reached 315, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation. That was up 46% from the previous year.

Now, the Iran war is putting even more pressure on farmers.

Before the war, roughly a third of the world’s fertilizer ingredients and a fifth of its oil supplies passed every day through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway off Iran’s southern coast. But since the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28, the strait has been effectively closed by Tehran, leaving scores of tankers stranded.

The strait’s closure has driven up global prices for fertilizer and for the diesel fuel that powers most of America’s heavy agricultural equipment.

The double whammy is hitting farmers just as they head into the spring planting season.

“This is that perfect storm where everything comes together and hammers the farmer,” said Mueller, who also serves as the president of the Iowa Corn Growers Association.

Mueller said his fertilizer supplier was selling a nitrogen fertilizer he needs for $795 per ton on Feb. 22, a few days before the war started. At the end of March, it was $990, Mueller said, a nearly $200 jump in just a few weeks.

Meanwhile, the price he’s paying for diesel has jumped, too. Diesel is now averaging $5.51 nationwide, up from $3.76 right before the war, according to AAA.

Mueller said he got most of the fertilizer he needs for spring before the war — but had to buy some at the higher prices. He’s holding off on purchasing the additional fertilizer he needs for summer, hoping prices will come down.

Mark Mueller, a farmer and president of the Iowa Corn Growers Association, thinks America is on the cusp of a farm crisis.
Mark Mueller, a farmer and president of the Iowa Corn Growers Association, thinks America is on the cusp of a farm crisis.Courtesy of Iowa Corn

President Donald Trump’s tariffs have also added to the cost of goods that farmers import from overseas — and frustrated many of the foreign buyers of America’s agricultural products.

“Our government made our life more difficult by walking away from trade deals or instituting tariffs or just basically making our customers angry — our customers being other nations and companies in other nations,” said Mueller.

Lance Lillibridge, a corn and cattle farmer from Vinton, Iowa, told NBC News he plans to use less fertilizer this year.

“I’m probably going to see a reduction in yield,” said Lillibridge. “If there’s not the supply out there, then the price is going to go up.”

If the war continues, the higher prices could ripple through the supply chain and ultimately result in higher prices at the supermarket.

“We’re talking about all the crops and all the food products that we consume on a daily basis,” said Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY-Parthenon.

“Anything that is grown and that requires fertilizers, which is most of everything that we consume, is potentially affected by this rise in fertilizer prices,” said Daco. “And as a result, we may see these prices rise rapidly across grocery stores in the U.S.”

Take corn, for example. If corn prices spike, then feeding cattle becomes more expensive for many farmers. Plus cattle farmers are also dealing with the higher fuel prices. The cost of beef has already hit record highs — in part from shrinking cattle herds and drought — and it could surge even more.

“I worry about how much more consumers will continue to pay for beef,” said Will Harris, a fourth-generation cattle farmer in Bluffton, Georgia. “I think that I can produce it as cheap as anybody else, but I don’t know where consumers draw their lines.”

It may take a while for price increases on the farm to show up at the grocery store. Farmers are just planting their spring crops now, and it could take months for them to be harvested and sent off to distribution centers and eventually grocery stores.

But consumers may see higher prices sooner rather than later, because of higher transport costs with pricier diesel.

“If you’re feeling these costs now, it’s only going to continue to increase as the supply chain fills with higher-cost goods,” said Lillibridge.

“Corn is used in over 4,000 products,” he added. “It’s not just food — it’s industrial products, like your paper that you would put in your printer has cornstarch in it, plastics, just tons of things have industrial uses from corn.”

Economists say the longer the war stretches on, the larger the effects could be.

An aerial view of a huge mountain of harvested corn.
Newly harvested corn in Inwood, Iowa. Consumers may see higher prices sooner rather than later because of higher transport costs with pricier diesel. Jim West / UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty images file

“Right now, our farmers can get the product — it’s just really expensive,” said Faith Parum, an economist at the American Farm Bureau Federation, an advocacy group for farmers and ranchers. “We’re slowly starting to hear the longer this goes on, we’re also going to have issues with even the availability of the fertilizer.”

That could further strain farmers.

“We’re going on to year four of losses across the farm economy,” said Parum. “It’s going to become harder and harder for them to put a crop in the ground.”

Before the war, the Agriculture Department estimated that farm sector debt could reach a record $624.7 billion in 2026.

Farmers have received some financial assistance from the federal government over the years. In December, the Trump administration announced a new tranche of $12 billion in aid to farmers.

At a White House event for farmers in March, Trump said that he would push for more aid and urged Congress to pass a new farm bill.

Trump also pledged to ask Congress to permit year-round sales of E15, an unleaded fuel blended with 15% ethanol that the American Farm Bureau Federation says could save consumers money at the gas pump and create markets for American-grown crops.

Image: President Trump Speaks To Farmers At The White House
Farmers listen as President Donald Trump speaks at the White House on Friday. During the event, Trump urged Congress to pass a new farm bill. Alex Wong / Getty Images

Mueller was among the farmers last month at the White House, where he listened to Trump.

“I guess I would liken it to empty calories,” he said of the president’s remarks. “It was like a pep rally with very little being said.”

Mueller fears that the mounting pressures on farmers, exacerbated by the war, could lead some to hang up their hats for good.

“I really do see fewer farmers when it’s all done,” he said. “In the end, the consumer will still have fewer choices, probably have a little higher prices, and farmers will have less margin than they did before.”

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The UCLA Bruins left the rest of the country in ruins!

In a dominant victory for the ages and a 37-1 season for the scrapbooks, UCLA won the Women’s NCAA Tournament for the first time.

You can celebrate UCLA’s historic and dramatic 79-51 victory over South Carolina with a commemorative page print from USA TODAY Sports. You can show off your UCLA pride for as little as $29, plus shipping and handling.

Buy UCLA championship page print

This full-page print, produced on high-quality, acid-free art paper, features stunning photography and a memorable headline commemorating the championship won by the Bruins on Easter Sunday at Phoenix’s Mortgage Matchup Center. The Bruins led wire-to-wire against the Gamecocks.

The page print makes a great gift for the UCLA fan or college basketball fan in your life. And with Moms, Dads and Grads season rapidly approaching, why not check a gift off your to-do list right now?

Voted the most outstanding player, Lauren Betts posted a double-double with 14 points and 11 rebounds. Gabriela Jaquez also doubled up — 21 points and 10 rebounds — as the Bruins ended the season on a 31-game winning streak.

Although it was UCLA’s first NCAA title, the Bruins also ruled women’s basketball in 1978. They won the AIAW championship, in an era when the NCAA did not hold tournaments for women.

Upgrade options for the UCLA page print include framed copies. The page print is available through the USA TODAY Store. Go to usatodaystore.com and search UCLA.

Own a piece of UCLA hoops history today!

Buy UCLA championship page print

Get UCLA championship gear

Looking for national championship hats, T-shirts and more?

Fanatics is among the options for UCLA championship gear.

Contact Gene Myers at gmyers@usatodayco.com. Check out books and page prints from theUSA TODAY Network — including books on the Olympic gold medals won by the U.S. women’s and men’s hockey teams in Italy, and tributes to Dale Earnhardt, Lee Corso and Bob Uecker. Also available are Coach Steve’s youth sports survival guide and two books about Caitlin Clark.

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The New York Islanders have made a surprising coaching change on Easter Sunday, with four games remaining in their regular-season schedule, firing Patrick Roy and replacing him with Pete DeBoer.

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported that the move was not a “rest-of-season” hire.

Even with the Islanders in a playoff spot and in third place in the Metropolitan Division, GM Mathieu Darche and the rest of the team’s brass didn’t feel safe. 

Though the Isles have a 42-31-5 record and 89 points in 78 games, they were in the midst of a four-game losing streak and a rough end to the month of March.

Roy was in his third season as the Islanders’ bench boss and was having his best season yet in Long Island. However, DeBoer has found a new home after being let go by the Dallas Stars last off-season.

DeBoer has been a successful head coach in the NHL. While he hasn’t been able to get his hands on a Stanley Cup yet, he’s seen several conference final appearances.

In his three years with Dallas, he helped his team advance to the Western Conference final in each of those three campaigns.

Before the Stars, he was the head coach of the Vegas Golden Knights and was successful with them in the regular season and postseason. He guided Vegas to two Pacific Division championships and a pair of conference finals (semifinal appearance in the case of the 2020-21 season).

Roy, a former Jack Adams Trophy winner, was in his sixth season as an NHL coach. He had a previous tenure with the Colorado Avalanche before his stint with the Islanders. He lasted three years with the Avs from 2013-14 and 2015-16.

Roy joins Bruce Cassidy, who was the coach of the Golden Knights, but was fired on March 30, making way for John Tortorella. Vegas had eight games remaining in its regular season when it made that coaching change.

Like the Islanders’ timing of parting ways with Roy, the Golden Knights were also third in their division when making the decision.

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.

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Tax season is stressful enough, but avoidable mistakes can turn a routine filing into an expensive headache.

With Tax Day just 10 days away, even small errors can mean the difference between a smooth refund and frustrating delays. In some cases, they can even trigger IRS notices or unexpected penalties.

Here are five common filing missteps to watch out for and how to avoid them:

1. Choosing the wrong filing status

Your filing status is one of the most important choices on your tax return because it helps determine your tax rate, your standard deduction and which credits you may be eligible to claim. Pick the wrong one, and you could end up paying more than you owe, getting a smaller refund or triggering delays if the IRS flags the return for review.

For many taxpayers, the confusion comes from life changes that happened during the year, like getting married or divorced, having a child, moving in with a partner, supporting an aging parent or sharing custody. Even if your situation feels straightforward, the IRS rules can be less intuitive, especially for taxpayers who aren’t sure whether they qualify as “head of household” or whether they can still file as “qualifying surviving spouse” after a spouse has died.

RETIRED? HERE’S WHEN THE IRS MIGHT TAKE A CLOSER LOOK AT YOUR FINANCES

Head of household, in particular, can be costly to get wrong. It typically comes with a larger standard deduction and more favorable tax brackets than filing as single – but it has strict requirements tied to paying more than half the cost of keeping up a home and having a qualifying dependent. If you don’t meet the rules and claim it anyway, you may have to pay back tax benefits later, plus penalties and interest.

When in doubt, the IRS has an online filing-status tool, and many tax software programs will walk you through the questions to help you choose the right category.

2. Leaving credits on the table

A woman preparing her taxes

One of the biggest and most expensive tax-season mistakes is failing to claim every credit or deduction you qualify for. That can mean a smaller refund or a higher bill.

“I think the top mistake people make is not fully understanding or taking the time to really research what are all the different deductions and the ways that you can put a little bit of extra money in your pocket that are available to you,” said Bill Sweeney, senior vice president of government affairs at AARP.

AVERAGE TAX REFUND TOPS $3,700 MIDWAY THROUGH FILING SEASON, TREASURY SAYS

Sweeney also warned taxpayers not to rely on last year’s return as a blueprint for filing because of recent changes to the tax code from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act

“This would be a good year given that there are these changes to the tax code, to make sure not to assume that what you did last year will convey over to this year. Really take a fresh look at your tax situation and see if there’s money that you’re leaving on the table,” he said.

3. Missing key deadlines

Couple reviewing finances

An extension can buy you time to file your paperwork, but it doesn’t give you extra time to pay. For most taxpayers, the IRS deadline to pay what you owe is April 15, 2026 – even if you request an extension to file later.

“Remember that even if you claim an extension, the money is owed on April 15,” said Mike Faulkender, co-chair of American Prosperity at the America First Policy Institute.

WHAT TRUMP’S NEXT PICK TO LEAD THE FEDERAL RESERVE MEANS FOR YOUR WALLET

Faulkender, a former Treasury official and IRS commissioner, said taxpayers who need more time should still estimate their bill and pay by the filing deadline to help avoid added costs.

“You have to actually send in a check or have the payment deducted from your account by the filing deadline,” he said.

If you can’t pay in full by April 15, pay what you can to help limit penalties and interest on top of your tax bill.

4. Entering bank account details incorrectly

If you choose direct deposit for your refund, the IRS relies on the routing and account numbers you provide. One wrong digit can lead to delays. 

If you pay what you owe by direct debit, incorrect banking details can also lead to a rejected payment and potentially result in penalties and interest.

5. Filing before all your tax forms arrive

'No source of revenue' can replace income taxes: Marcus Lemonis

Timing matters when it comes to filing your taxes. Submitting your return before you’ve received all your key paperwork, like W-2s or 1099s, can lead to errors, missing income or a return you have to amend later.

Faulkender said there’s a simple way to double-check what’s been reported under your name before you file. 

“One of the things that I learned last year when I was IRS commissioner, was that if you create an account on irs.gov, you can see everything that’s been filed under your tax ID,” he said. 

“We’re supposed to receive all of our W-2s and our 1099 forms in the mail in January and February. But if you’re missing one, or you misplaced it rather than requesting it again, you can actually go and see what was filed under your taxpayer identification number if you create an account on IRS.gov.” 

Filing late can also cost you extra money, especially if you owe. The goal is to wait until you have what you need, then file as soon as you’re ready.

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The Trump administration filed an emergency motion to restore White House ballroom reconstruction, warning “time is of the essence” and saying President Donald Trump and his staff’s “security and safety” are at risk by the judge’s “untenable” ruling.

In the filing, Justice Department lawyers said the partially built project includes “deep Top Secret excavations, foundations, and structures” that must be completed quickly to protect sensitive construction and security features from exposure.

“This order is untenable and must be stayed in that the building is under construction, with deep Top Secret excavations, foundations, and structures, already built, and ready to receive heavily fortified, for security reasons, steel, bullet, ballistic, and blast proof glass, and drone proof roofing materials, which must be finished quickly, and not allowed to be exposed to the conditions and elements of an open construction site,” Friday night’s motion urges.

“Time is of the essence!”

JUDGE WARNS TRUMP ADMINISTRATION AGAINST ‘IRREVERSIBLE’ WHITE HOUSE BALLROOM CONSTRUCTION WORK

The appeal asks the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit to stay U.S. District Judge Richard Leon’s order halting the project, which Leon ruled cannot proceed without congressional approval.

The administration argues the judge himself acknowledged that work needed to secure the White House grounds and protect the president and staff can continue.

“In granting this shocking, unprecedented, and improper injunction, one that could have been sought long ago, prior to the start of construction (in that there was full knowledge, through large scale media attention and publicity, that the White House ballroom was planned to be built, and there would have been a great deal of time for them to object, long before the start of construction, even though their objection would likewise have been baseless and frivolous), the district court took the erroneous, sweeping view that Congress did not authorize the ballroom construction at the White House — yet correctly allows construction ‘necessary to ensure the safety and security of the White House and its grounds, including the ballroom construction site, and provide for the personal safety of the President and his staff,’” the DOJ argued.

WHITE HOUSE FIRES BACK AT CRITICS CALLING TRUMP’S MASSIVE ARCH ‘TOO BIG’

Trump says White House ballroom built at ‘no charge to taxpayers’

Also, the lawyers wrote, the judge ignored the administration’s overtures to have him visit the site to see the privately funded $400 million project.

“The judge was given an opportunity to see the construction taking place at the site, but surprisingly, never responded to our invitation,” Trump Assistant Attorney General Brett Shumate wrote.

Preservationists challenging the construction say the administration unlawfully bypassed federal review and authorization requirements, but the DOJ rejected the judge’s claims that congressional approval is needed for a privately funded ballroom.

WHITE HOUSE TOUTS TRUMP’S ‘BOLD VISION’ FOR TOWERING INDEPENDENCE ARCH FOR AMERICA 250

A rendering of the proposed White House ballroom shared by President Donald Trump on Truth Social.

“For decades, Congress has vested the President with overlapping statutory authorities that allow the President to make the improvements he deems necessary to White House grounds and structures,” Shumate wrote. “Yet, a district judge ordered the President to halt ongoing reconstruction of the East Wing of the White House by April 14, leaving a massive excavation and structurally completed site adjacent to the now open and exposed Executive Mansion and threatening grave national-security harms to the White House, the President and his family, and the President’s staff.”

“Almost 400 Million Dollars of private donations and contributions (No taxpayer dollars are being used to build this long sought, and desperately needed, ballroom!) have already been committed, or spent, in the purchase of heavy, large scale, and other types of building materials. The path to this injunction confirms its unfairness, untenability, and danger to the White House and the people working and living within its walls,” he added.

TRUMP PAUSES OIL EXEC SUMMIT TO PEEK AT WHITE HOUSE BALLROOM’S PROGRESS

A rendering of the new White House ballroom.

The new motion filed by the National Park Service said the federal district court lacks the constitutional authority “to entertain this suit, which rests on a single pedestrian’s subjective architectural feelings.”

The initial lawsuit against the construction was brought by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, a nonprofit organization, alleging Trump exceeded his authority when he razed the historic East Wing and launched construction on the new building.

Friday’s motion argues the claims are “legally baseless” and “no Trust member has standing.”

TRUMP ADMIN DEFENDS WHITE HOUSE BALLROOM AS NATIONAL SECURITY MATTER

A rendering of the new White House ballroom.

“The President has complete authority to renovate the White House,” Shumate concluded.

The East Wing was originally built in 1902 and expanded four decades later during Franklin D. Roosevelt’s presidency.

The ballroom is part of Trump’s broader push to reshape Washington’s monumental core, which also includes plans for a 250-foot (76-meter) arch and changes at the Trump Kennedy Center.

TRUMP ADMIN FIGHTS IN COURT TO KEEP WHITE HOUSE EAST WING DEMOLITION, $300M BALLROOM BUILD ON TRACK

President Donald Trump: We're building one of the greatest ballrooms in the world

“I would like to thank the hardworking Commissioners and Staff of the National Capital Planning Commission, who just voted overwhelmingly, 8-1, to approve the magnificent White House Ballroom now rising on this Hallowed Ground,” Trump wrote Thursday night on Truth Social.

“I am pleased to announce that even Board Member Senator Rand Paul, known as an extraordinarily difficult vote, voted a strong YES,” Trump said. “For more than 150 years, every President has dreamt about having a Ballroom at the White House to accommodate people for Grand Parties, State Visits, and even, in the Modern Day, Inaugurations.”

WARREN-LED INQUIRY DRAWS NEW DETAILS ON TRUMP BALLROOM DONATIONS FROM MAJOR CORPORATIONS

Trump pauses high-stakes oil meeting to check out ballroom progress

“I am honored to be the first President to finally get this much-needed project, which is on time and under budget, underway,” the president added. “When completed, it will be the Greatest and Most Beautiful Ballroom of its kind anywhere in the World, and a fabulous complement to our Beautiful and Storied White House!”

Trump has lamented legal challenges to his administration’s agenda, rebuking “rogue judges” siding with “baseless” Democrat lawyers and lawsuits.

“In the Ballroom case, the Judge said we have to get Congressional approval,” Trump wrote this week on Truth Social. “He is WRONG! Congressional approval has never been given on anything, in these circumstances, big or small, having to do with construction at the White House.”

Reuters contributed to this report.

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President Donald Trump directed a profanity-laced message to Iran on Sunday, signaling the U.S. will target the regime’s power plants and bridges on Tuesday if the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened.

“Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran,” Trump’s post read. “There will be nothing like it!!!” 

“Open the F—– Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell – JUST WATCH!” read Trump’s message to Iran’s leaders. “Praise be to Allah.”

Trump on Sunday told Fox News chief foreign correspondent Trey Yingst that he believes he’ll be able to make a deal with Iran by tomorrow — the president’s deadline for Iran to reopen the strait.

TRUMP CALLS ON WORLD TO BUILD ‘DELAYED COURAGE’ SEIZE KEY OIL ROUTE FROM IRAN

“I think there is a good chance tomorrow, they are negotiating now,” the president said.

If Iran fails to make a deal, Trump said, “You’re going to see bridges and power plants dropping all over their country.”

“If they don’t make a deal and fast, I’m considering blowing everything up and taking over the oil,” he said.

EX-NATO AMBASSADOR WARNS US AND ALLIES MUST ‘STOP THE SNIPING’ AND UNITE TO END IRAN CONFLICT

Iran has hampered passage through the narrow waterway, which is crucial for the global oil trade, since the onset of the war to use as one of its bargaining chips. Iranian interference in the strait has significantly impaired the movement of oil tankers along the waterway, causing global oil prices to rise.

Trump’s latest message shows the president is hardening his threats to strike Iran’s critical infrastructure if Tehran doesn’t reopen the Strait of Hormuz by his Monday deadline.

ships in Arabian Gulf

On Saturday, Trump posted a reminder to Iran about his 10-day deadline to reopen the strait, writing, “Time is running out – 48 hours before all Hell will reign down on them.”

The president has previously issued such threats before extending them when mediators have claimed progress toward ending the war on agreeable terms.

Donald Trump makes address on Iran conflict

Trump earlier announced that he would be holding a press conference at the White House on Monday alongside members of the military.

Fox News Digital’s Peter Pinedo and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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The daring U.S. military rescue of a seriously wounded airman is being hailed as an American success story, as President Donald Trump announced “we got him!” and detailed the “AMAZING show of bravery and talent,” turning a potential American setback into a show of might.

Details about the rescue are trickling in, including senior administration officials telling Fox News how the CIA deflected enemy attention with a “deception campaign.”

The CIA spread word in Iran through multiple sources that U.S. forces had already found the second of two airmen who ejected from their F-15, and were moving him out of Iran in a maritime exfiltration elsewhere, sources told Fox News, but that was designed to buy time to find the stranded weapons system officer.

The CIA picked up a distress signal, passing the intelligence on to the Pentagon and White House, which ordered the immediate rescue mission, according to sources.

MORNING GLORY: PRESIDENT TRUMP IS ON THE CUSP OF A HISTORIC ACHIEVEMENT

There was initial fear the “beacon signal” was an Iranian “trap,” sources said.

“There was a lot at stake here,” the source said.

Once the CIA confirmed Saturday morning that this was not a trap, the missing airman was located using advanced technical capabilities.

CIA Director John Ratcliffe informed Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Dan “Raizin’” Caine and, ultimately, Trump.

“Within eight hours, we had planes in motion,” the source said. “Within almost 12 hours we were on the ground in Iran.

TRUMP TELLS ‘STRANGE’ IRANIAN NEGOTIATORS TO ‘GET SERIOUS SOON’ OR ‘IT WON’T BE PRETTY’

Military expert breaks down high-risk mission to rescue downed US airman

“We’ve seen before what they do with prisoners. We were going to expend every effort to make sure we got to him first.”

The U.S. used MQ9 Reaper drones to protect the area around where the airman was hiding and fired on anything that came close to that area and any area where U.S. forces were operating to prevent crowds or any Iranians from approaching, sources confirmed to Fox News.

“We executed multiple large-scale strikes in the surrounding area using every tactical jet in the U.S. inventory and B-1 Bombers to keep him safe,” according to a senior U.S. official.

Trump saluted the complex operation to exfiltrate the “highly respected colonel.”

“We have rescued the seriously wounded, and really brave, F-15 Crew Member/Officer, from deep inside the mountains of Iran,” Trump wrote Sunday morning on Truth Social, announcing an Oval Office news conference set for 1 p.m. ET Monday. “The Iranian Military was looking hard, in big numbers, and getting close.”

MORNING GLORY: WHAT WILL DONALD TRUMP’S LEGACY BE AS A WARTIME PRESIDENT?

“This type of raid is seldom attempted because of the danger to ‘man and equipment.’ It just doesn’t happen!” Trump said. “The second raid came after the first one, where we rescued the pilot in broad daylight, also unusual, spending seven hours over Iran. An AMAZING show of bravery and talent by all!”

One night earlier, Trump hailed “one of the most daring Search and Rescue Operations in U.S. History.”

“My fellow Americans, over the past several hours, the United States Military pulled off one of the most daring Search and Rescue Operations in U.S. History, for one of our incredible Crew Member Officers, who also happens to be a highly respected Colonel, and who I am thrilled to let you know is now SAFE and SOUND!” Trump wrote Saturday night on Truth Social.

Retired Lt. Col. Darin Gaub analyzes US airman rescue in Iran

“This brave Warrior was behind enemy lines in the treacherous mountains of Iran, being hunted down by our enemies, who were getting closer and closer by the hour, but was never truly alone because his Commander in Chief, Secretary of War, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and fellow Warfighters were monitoring his location 24 hours a day, and diligently planning for his rescue,” he said.

The injured airman was the second of two crew members from the warplane Iran claimed it had brought down with its air defenses on Friday.

Several aircraft were destroyed during the U.S. rescue mission, Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guards claimed Sunday according to the Tasnim news agency. An Iranian military spokesperson said a C-130 military transport plane and two Black Hawk helicopters were among the downed craft.

TRUMP ORDERS WAR DEPT TO POSTPONE STRIKES ON IRANIAN ENERGY SITES, CITING ‘PRODUCTIVE’ TALKS TO END WAR

Map showing location in Khuzestan province Iran where U.S. F-15 jet was reportedly shot down

Israeli intelligence had assisted the CIA in determining the location of the missing WSO and removing doubt about an Iranian “trap,” halting its attacks in the area to facilitate the mission, an Israeli security official told Reuters.

“All Israelis rejoice in the incredible rescue of a brave American pilot by America’s dauntless warriors,” Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wrote in a statement Sunday morning. “This proves that when free societies muster their courage and their resolve, they can confront seemingly insurmountable odds and overcome the forces of darkness and terror.”

The weekend rescue left Trump resolute in swift and decisive victory amid a 10-day deadline to reopen the Hormuz Strait to oil tankers, issuing a stunning expletive-laced warning Sunday morning.

“Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “There will be nothing like it!!!

“Open the F–in’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell – JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah,” he added.

Fox News’ Jennifer Griffin, Trey Yingst and Reuters contributed to this report.

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PHOENIX — He still has trouble believing he’s here, but then again, Detroit Tigers rookie Kevin McGonigle always knew this is where he belonged.

He was born and bred a baseball rat, convinced that one day he’d be a major league ballplayer.

And now that he’s arrived as the youngest Tiger to make his debut since George Burns in 1914, it already feels as if he’s been around for 20 years.

The dude may be 21, but he’s going on 41 in maturity.

“I think he’s a lot more polished and more mature as a ballplayer than when I came up,” said Tigers infielder Colt Keith, who made his major-league debut at 22. “I mean, he’s handling it really well. I don’t see any panic in his eyes. I mean, he’s out there just playing loose, having fun, just trying to help us win.

“It’s really awesome to see. He’s going to be a great player for us.”

McGonigle, who never played above Class AA Erie, has spent one week in the major leagues and already is establishing himself as one of the finest young players in the game and certainly a future face of the Tigers. The Tigers would love to keep him around as long as possible and have engaged in talks with him and his agent about a long-term deal of at least eight years.

“We don’t need him to be the savior,” Scott Harris, Tigers president of baseball operations, said after announcing McGonigle’s promotion, with McGonigle producing an .888 OPS with two homers and six RBIs, drawing as many walks as hits this spring. “We don’t need him to carry us. We just need him to help us.

“This roster is pretty darn good with or without Kevin. We just think it’s better with him on it. That’s why he’s here.”

McGonigle, the second-ranked prospect entering the year, has been nothing short of dazzling in his first week in The Show. He produced four hits in his major-league debut – the sixth to achieve the feat on opening day since 1900 – and was rewarded with the lineup card along with baseballs from his debut.

He spent the first seven games hitting .346 with a .952 OPS, and perhaps even more surprisingly, playing dazzling defense at third base. He’s a natural shortstop, and his best defensive position may be second base, but he’s been smooth at third, making the throws that need to be made while showing strong range.

“He never quits on the play, which is a great characteristic to have,” Tigers manager A.J. Hinch says. “He can get on the ground. He comes up and throws accurate. When the speed of the game is speeding up, he stays with the same rhythm and cadence to complete the play.”

He’s the reason why the Tigers didn’t bother pursuing free-agent third baseman Alex Bregman this winter.

He received a thunderous ovation from the sellout crowd at Comerica Park at the Tigers’ home opener Friday, which included about 15 members of his family.

“Are you surprised?” Hinch said after the game. “This city is going to fall in love with this kid because of how he plays and how he represents himself. We just got to let him play, got to let him learn, and we got to let him fail a little bit.”

It still seems all surreal for the kid from Aldan, Pennsylvania, just outside Philadelphia, who started swinging a bat with his dad at the age of 2, grew up a huge Chase Utley fan, and studied hitting tapes from eight-time batting champion Tony Gwynn.

“I just love the way [Utley] played,” McGonigle, the 5-foot-10 left-handed hitter, tells USA TODAY Sports. “He played the game hard. And I feel like he played it the right way, as well. That’s the way I want to play.”

And, yes, he would love to hit like Gwynn, the 15-time All-Star who not only had a career .338 batting average, but who never struck out more than 40 times in a single season, and never more than 30 times in his last 13 seasons. He was thrilled just to meet and speak to Gwynn’s son in San Diego, Tony Gwynn Jr., the Padres’ radio analyst.

“Growing up, my dad would show me film on him and Chase Utley,” McGonigle says. “They’re two guys that he would show their swings and says to kind of try to copy the way they swung, especially Tony, it’s unbelievable how few times he struck out.”

These days, at least in the infancy of his career, McGonigle reminds Hinch and starters Justin Verlander and Tarik Skubal of Bregman, now with the Chicago Cubs, who eats, sleeps and dreams baseball.

“That’s an ultimate compliment,” McGonigle says. “I’m a big fan of Bregman as well. He plays the game really, really hard. And obviously, he’s super, super good.”

Then again, as Skubal, the Tigers’ two-time Cy Young winner says, there will come a time when McGonigle is the one everyone wants to be compared to.

“They’re both obsessed with the game of baseball,” says Skubal, who got to know Bregman during the winter working out in Phoenix and were teammates in the WBC. “I don’t really like comparing though. I want Kevin to be Kevin. In five or six years, they should be comparing someone else to Kevin. That’s kind of how I want it to be.

“But they’re both obsessed about the game, and they both grind in the box. They both grind in the weight room, the training room, everything. And they take this game pretty seriously and want to win really badly.

“Those are all really positive things, but as Kev gets more comfortable here, and just more time on his side, he’s going to blossom into an even better baseball player. That’s what I’m excited about. He’s doing to experience all of the growing pains this year, success, failure, all of that stuff, but he’s going to be a really good baseball player.”

Really, McGonigle’s toughest task in his first week was simply finding the players’ parking lot at Comerica Park, circling the stadium several times before finding it.

“I did laps around the park because I didn’t know where to go,” McGonigle told reporters Friday morning. “But I ended up finding the parking lot. This place is unreal.”

If he has the career everyone in the Tigers’ organization anticipates, he’ll have a nameplate reserved for the closest spot near the ballpark entrance of his choice.

“There’s just something different about him,” Tigers outfielder Riley Greene says. “The best way to describe him is that he’s a ball of fire. He’s finding barrels all of the time. He’s making plays. His energy is up. He’s doing stuff like guys with five or six years in the big leagues.

“It’s pretty impressive to watch.”

And once McGonigle learned he made the team, well, that fiery emotion became even more intense.

“I feel like he was even more motivated,” Greene says. “He was like, ‘We’re here to work. We got a long year. Let’s win some baseball games. Let’s go.’”

That’s McGonigle. He doesn’t care where he plays in the field. Where he hits in the lineup. Just give him a uniform, and even without playing a day at Triple-A, he wants to do everything possible to lead the Tigers to where they haven’t gone since 1984: A World Series championship.

“We’re trying to win the World Series,” Hinch says, “and Kevin McGonigle helps us get there.”

Says McGonigle: “I’m just taking it all in, trying to get prepared, and doing everything possible to help this team win. I’ve always been good telling myself it’s the same game, no matter what level I’m at.

“I feel like I’ve handled that well so far, and I’m looking forward to keep doing it.”

Welcome to the big leagues, kid.

Now find the parking lot.

Around the basepaths

– MLB and the players union have yet to engage in preliminary negotiations on the next collective bargaining agreement, but their first meeting is expected to be in the next few weeks.

The owners have a $2 billion war chest while the players union has about $520 million stashed away in case of a lockout after Dec. 1.

– The Miami Marlins, off to a surprising 5-2 start, could have one of the most difficult dilemmas at the trade deadline if they are still hanging around.

They must decide whether to trade ace Sandy Alcantara, who is showing signs of his 2022 Cy Young form by starting the season with a 2-0 record and 0.00 ERA, striking out 16 in 12 ⅔ innings, including a three-hit, complete-game shutout in his last start against the Marlins.

Alcantara’s five-year, $56 million contract expires after this season, but he has a $21 million club option or a $2 million buyout in 2027. Rival executives still fully expect the Marlins to trade Alcantara, knowing they should have perhaps baseball’s most lucrative trade chip at the July 31 deadline.

– Arizona Diamondbacks All-Star second baseman Ketel Marte became a 10-and-5 player on Friday, meaning that even if the Diamondbacks change their mind and want to trade him, it’s too late. Marte can’t be traded without his permission.

– The Dodgers certainly have a competitive advantage with their massive revenue streams, the latest a five-year, $125 million deal with Uniqlo, with Dodgers president Stan Kasten saying: “I recognize that we have advantages that other teams don’t get to benefit from. I acknowledge that. I’m not going to apologize for capitalizing.’’

Yet, Kasten cautions, they don’t have a monetary advantage in everything. Taxes for California residents can be a deterrent for free agents. There’s also one revenue stream their competitors enjoy that simply doesn’t exist for the Dodgers.

“I do have a business disadvantage,” Kasten said, trying to keep a straight face. “In Washington, I got decent money for selling an ad on the tarp. Morton Salt .I can’t get a [expletive] penny for a tarp ad here, because we never roll it out all year. So no one talks about that.”

Kasten, knowing there has been only one rainout at Dodger Stadium since 2000, couldn’t help but laugh when it began raining Tuesday night at Dodger Stadium, forcing the tarp to come out.

Alas, there was no advertisement on the tarp.

– While there have been a run of teams locking up their young players with no big-league experience to long-term contracts, from Seattle’s Colt Emerson (eight-year, $95 million) to Milwaukee’s Cooper Pratt (eight-year, $50.75 million) and soon Pittsburgh’s Konnor Griffin (nine years, $140 million), Detroit Tigers infielder Colt Keith can only sit back and smile.

Keith signed a six-year, $28.64 million contract in January 2024, becoming the first Tigers player to receive a long-term deal before his first major-league game.

“It’s really cool to see guys get their money early and locking down long-term,” Keith tells USA TODAY Sports. “We’ll see what the effect is on other other end.”

Will it relax them?

“I think it depends on the personality,” he said. “For some guys, the long-term commitment knowing they’re going to be in the big leagues and having that money helps them relax. I think I was more on the other side of that, where the money wasn’t as big a factor. I just wanted to be in the big leagues and perform well.

“I had only spent two months in Triple-A, and I guess I would have been optioned out of camp if I didn’t sign it. A lot of times signing that money commitment with the team guarantees you a spot on the roster, whether you’re struggling or not, which is good for the player.

“That’s the biggest factor I did it, getting on that [26-man] roster and getting more of a leash than other players. It’s definitely an advantage, a positive for a lot of guys.”

– The ABS challenge system has been in effect for only a week, with players, managers and umpires all weighing in.

There’s not a consensus opinion on whether it’s good or bad for the game, but there’s a sense that within five years, there will be a fully automated system in which the strikezone is completely governed by “robo umpires.”

Tigers manager A.J. Hinch’s quick takeaways?

“The benches are a lot quieter during the game,’’ Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. “You don’t hear the razzing with players and umpires.’’

Hinch on whether the game will eventually go to a full ABS system: “I hope not. I think the human element is super important. I don’t want to lose the catcher catching a close pitch and being frustrated, but not willing to challenge. That element of the game I think is important.’’

– How is it possible that Atlanta opens the season playing 13 consecutive games without a day off and the Yankees have four days off before playing their 10th game on Tuesday?

– The Yankees don’t need days off the way they’re pitching. They yielded just eight runs in their first seven games, tying an MLB record, while their starting pitching has given up just four runs, also tying an MLB record.

– So, just how much did Venezuela’s WBC championship mean for Arizona Diamondbacks starter Eduardo Rodriguez, who started that game: “It was the greatest moment of my career. No matter what I do the rest of my career, nothing will ever top that.’’

– Who is that one surprise team scouts are raving about this year?

The Texas Rangers.

“It wouldn’t surprise me one bit to see those guys in the World Series, especially with that pitching,’’ one veteran scout said. “They are that good.”

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

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  • The Los Angeles Dodgers’ history reflects America’s social migration, civil rights, and immigration issues.
  • Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s color line with the Dodgers, a move enabled by his family’s participation in the Great Migration.
  • The team’s move to Los Angeles involved the controversial displacement of mostly Mexican-American families from Chavez Ravine.
  • Pitcher Fernando Valenzuela’s arrival in 1981 sparked “Fernandomania,” strengthening the team’s bond with its growing Latino fanbase.

LOS ANGELES – It was Opening Day at Dodger Stadium on March 26, and a pregame ceremony paused as fans waited for the arrival of the two World Series trophies the Los Angeles Dodgers had won the past two seasons.

Finally, a blue Cadillac lowrider driven by actor Will Ferrell parted the center-field gate and pulled onto the warning track. Two of the car’s occupants were the World Series trophies, and up went cheers, especially from thousands of Latinos in the Pavilion section beyond the outfield walls.

“That’s how you got to do it in L.A.,” declared Matthew Oviedo, 32, who grew up in East Los Angeles, one of the prominently Latino communities where lowriders were popularized.

Latinos make up about 40% of the Dodgers fanbase. But like the team, the city in which they play and America at large, Dodger fans are an ethnic melting pot – White, Asian, Black and Latino. Heritage Nights have become popular for MLB teams celebrating different cultures, and this season the Dodgers have scheduled seven – one night each for Japanese, Mexican, Filipino, Black, Guatemalan, Salvadoran and Korean cultures.

As America’s 250th anniversary approaches, the Dodgers provide a powerful lens through which to view the country’s history − specifically, issues of social migration, civil rights and immigration.

In the past 10 months, Dodger Stadium has been used for celebrations and protests. Celebrations of the team’s success as the Dodgers seek a third straight World Series title. And protests calling for the team to reject the Trump administration’s immigration policy disproportionately impacting Latinos.

Buy our Dodgers championship book

The stadium also happens to be built on land where families, mostly Mexican-American, were uprooted from their homes in the name of progress. The estimated number of families who lived on the land range from 300 to more than 1,800 in the years before Dodger Stadium was built.

“We’re standing in somebody’s backyard,” Richard Moreno, 46, a self-described superfan also known as “Mariachi Loco,” told USA TODAY inside the stadium on Opening Day. “It hurts, but what can you do?’’

A star is born running from oppression

Steam billowed into the sky as trains chugged across America. The Great Migration was underway.

Between 1910 and 1970, an estimated 6 million Black residents left the South for other parts of the country, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. They were running from racial violence, segregation and economic oppression.

“They found the courage within themselves to break free,” author Isabel Wilkerson wrote for the Smithsonian magazine.

In late spring of 1920, a Black woman boarded a train in Cairo, Georgia, and embarked on a trip of more than 2,200 miles to Pasadena, California. Her husband had left the family and she was traveling with their five children, the youngest a boy about 16 months old.

His name was Jack Roosevelt Robinson. But America would know him as Jackie Robinson, the baseball player who broke the Major League color line in 1947 as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers.

In 1919, the year Jackie Robinson was born in Georgia, the NAACP published a booklet entitled “Thirty Years of Lynching in the United States: 1889-1918.” The organization reported there had been 386 lynchings in Georgia, second most only to Mississippi among U.S. states during that 30-year period.

Robinson’s parents, Mallie and Jerry, were sharecroppers who lived in shack-like conditions on the Sasser plantation in southeastern Georgia. After Jerry Robinson left the family, Mallie Robinson took them to Pasadena, then an affluent city 20 miles from Los Angeles where some of her relatives lived.

“It was a fairly decent-looking community,” said Okeyo Jumal, 82, a Black historian from Pasadena. “And we knew that because people who came out later on (from the South) would say, ‘This is a Black community? This is a nice-looking community to be a Black community.’”

But the municipal pool in Pasadena was open to non-Whites only one day a week. Black residents watched movies from segregated balconies. Their economic opportunities were limited.

Mallie Robinson worked as a maid, saved her modest wages and bought a four-bedroom clapboard house at 121 Pepper St. Jackie Robinson had a group of interracial friends called “The Pepper Street Gang” and between 1938 and 1941 he was a four-sport star at Pasadena Junior College and then at UCLA.

“Even with his prodigious athletic talent, his opportunities would’ve been circumscribed in the South by racism,” said William Deverell, a University of Southern California (USC) professor and historian who lives in Pasadena. “So coming here and going to Pasadena City College and going to UCLA, it’s not perfect by any means, but it’s a lot better (than Georgia). I think that opened the doors for his rise to athletic fame.”

In short, the Great Migration may have carved a path for the most significant player in baseball history.

Bigger than baseball: Jackie Robinson, White allies and fan integration

Black soldiers returned home from World War II in 1945 angry about having fought oppression abroad only to encounter it again at home. They demanded equal rights.

But U.S. armed forces and public schools remained segregated. Major League Baseball clung to an unwritten rule banning Black players. Under that backdrop, Robinson broke baseball’s color line on April 15, 1947, as part of an unlikely partnership.

Branch Rickey, then the Dodgers’ president and general manager, was largely responsible for signing Robinson. He wore bow ties, smoked cigars and was determined to win. He was 65.

Robinson impressed reporters with his intelligence and remained calm in the face of racist taunts and threats. He was 28.

“Those two men took it to another level,” Della Britton, president and CEO of the Jackie Robinson Foundation, told USA TODAY Sports. “It worked because Branch Rickey had the gumption to do it and it worked because Jackie followed up.”

Of Rickey, Britton added, “It took White allies to create progress and to agitate and move the country forward.”

The Dodgers, at risk of alienating their fans and fellow teams, gave Robinson a chance. He turned it into something bigger.

Yes, he won the inaugural Rookie of the Year award in 1947, was named National League MVP in 1949 and in 1955 helped lead the Dodgers to their first World Series title. By then, however, he also had emerged as a national figure speaking out about equal rights.

“Robinson is not just a symbol of integration in America,” Johnny Smith, a professor and sports historian at Georgia Tech University, told USA TODAY. “He is a crucial actor, an agent of change, a crucial voice.”

Pete Hamill, the late journalist who grew up in Brooklyn, said the Dodgers integrated not only their team but also their fans.

“You could be an Irishman, an Italian, and a Jew, and you could all be in Ebbets Field, sitting together, rooting for the Dodgers.” Hamill told Brian Purnell, author of “Fighting Jim Crow in the County of Kings.”

 “…we became the most American place in the country,” Hamill told Time magazine.

During Robinson’s rookie year, the Dodgers drew 1.8 million, their highest season attendance at that point.

‘The boom is thrilling’: Dodgers look to baseball’s western frontier

As if fueled by another gold rush, California’s population grew by almost 50% between 1950 and 1960.

“We’re in the Cold War and the federal government begins to start to pour money into defense and aeronautics and aerospace, and Southern California is the chief site of that,” said Deverell, the USC professor. “Even with the trepidations of the Cold War, the economic boom and the technological boom is thrilling.”

Amid those dynamics, Los Angeles officials courted a potential resident: Walter O’Malley, then owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers.

O’Malley rebuffed the initial overtures. But his efforts to find a site in New York on which to build a newer and bigger stadium than Ebbets Field in Brooklyn failed. And his interest in Los Angeles and a roughly 300-acre site for a new stadium climbed.

Because there were no major league teams in California, O’Malley’s son and former Dodgers owner Peter O’Malley said he researched attendance figures of minor-league teams in the L.A.-area and was concerned.

“I remember saying, ‘Dad, I’ve looked at these Coast League attendance figures for the Hollywood Stars and the L.A. Angels,’” Peter O’Malley told USA TODAY. “‘Are you sure MLB is going to be embraced?’”

On April 18, 1958, the Dodgers made their home debut in Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, the team’s temporary home. They drew a crowd of 78,672, then a record for a regular-season game, and beat the San Francisco Giants 6-5.

The Giants had also relocated from New York between the 1957 and 1958 seasons.

In Brooklyn, the Dodgers never drew more than 1.8 million fans in a season. In Los Angeles, they drew more than 2 million fans seven times in their first nine seasons. The Dodgers seemed to be riding one wave while creating one of their own.

By 1969, California had five MLB teams – the Giants, Oakland A’s, California Angels, San Diego Padres and the Dodgers, who have remained among the MLB leaders in attendance.

‘They’ll be mad forever’: Chavez Ravine’s displaced communities

Based on the U.S. Census, the number of Mexican immigrants in the U.S. tripled between 1910 to 1930 to 600,000. For these families, finding affordable housing in Los Angeles involved resourcefulness.

About five decades before the Dodgers relocated to Los Angeles, impoverished Mexican families began moving onto land with modest homes and dirt roads. The property became known as Chavez Ravine, and the population grew to at least hundreds of families.

There was a grocery store, churches and an elementary school. But with the promise of federal funds to build public housing, the city of Los Angeles used eminent domain to force out residents. The city of Los Angeles paid each family approximately $6,500 to $10,500 for their properties, with the fairness of the compensation left in dispute.

Frank Wilkinson, a key figure in the project, said he promised residents they would have the first right to return when new high-rise buildings were completed. But politicians who branded the project socialistic killed the deal, and Los Angeles later used the land to help lure the Dodgers.

While most of the residents accepted compensation for their homes and left, a few families refused to go.

On May 8, 1959, a local TV crew captured footage of Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies forcibly removing people from their homes as groundbreaking for Dodger Stadium approached.

“The old lady throwing the rocks at the officers is my great-grandmother, Abrana Arechiga,” said Melissa Arechiga, president and founder of Buried Under the Blue, a nonprofit seeking reparations for the displaced communities of Palo Verde, La Loma and Bishop.

Dodger Stadium, with a seating capacity of 56,000, opened in time for the 1962 season.

Reflecting on the controversy, Peter O’Malley, 88, said it was “a tough time.”

“The grandchildren of some of those people are still mad, they’ll be mad forever,” he said. “Some of the grandchildren of those few families have learned the history and they’re fine with it. They get it and they’ve moved on.”

The Mexican Sandy Koufax: Fernando Valenzuela ‘a gift from the heavens’

The Dodgers became the first MLB team to have a Spanish-language radio broadcast in 1958. Jaime Jarrin, who joined the broadcast crew the following year, said Walter O’Malley used to say the Dodgers needed to find a Mexican Sandy Koufax.

O’Malley understood demographics.

In 1960, Hispanics represented 6.4% of the Los Angeles population. The figure quadrupled by 1980, with 816,000 Hispanics in the city.

“You have the rise of the Latino consumer market in the 1980s,” said Jose Alamillo, professor and chairperson of the Chicano/a Studies Department at California State University Channel Islands. “I think that becomes really important because now there’s a kind of a recognition by a lot of companies that this is a market that hasn’t been fully tapped.

“You have Anheuser Busch, you have Pizza Hut, you have all kinds of McDonald’s going after the Hispanic market in the early 1980s. So that’s what’s happening as well, is this recognition of a young Latino consumer market that has yet to be tapped into.”

In 1979, the Dodgers discovered their Mexican Sandy Koufax. Two years later, he electrified the baseball world.

His name was Fernando Valenzuela.

The portly 20-year-old pitcher from Etchohuaquila, a small village in Mexico, started the 1981 season 8-0. Latinos flocked to Dodger Stadium and “Fernandomania” was born.

Valenzuela finished the season as the National League Rookie of the Year and the NL Cy Young Award winner. He also helped repair the schism between the Dodgers and Latinos resentful about the families forcibly removed from Chavez Ravine.

“Fernando was a gift from the heavens,” Jarrin said.

The Latino fan base swelled.

‘A history of being the first,’ a present in first place

In 1987, the Dodgers became the first team to establish a year-round baseball academy in the Dominican Republic and later signed Adrian Beltre, a third baseman and future Hall of Famer; Pedro Martinez, a pitcher and future Hall of Famer; and Raul Mondesi, an outfielder who was the NL Rookie of the Year in 1994.

In 1994, the team signed pitcher Chan Ho Park, the first Korean major leaguer. Then pitcher Hideo Nomo in 1995, Nomo becoming the first Japanese major leaguer in 30 years.

“The Dodgers long have had a history of being the first,” said Marissa Kiss, the assistant director of George Mason University’s Institute for Immigration Research who has examined immigrant MLB players and immigration policy. “(The) Jackie Robinson signing, being accepting of non-White players and Latino players. But at the same time, what was really the motive of it, too? They were looking for players to fill their rosters, cheap source labor.”

The current Dodgers roster includes a half-dozen Latino players and, from lowrider cars to mariachi music, the Dodgers cater to their Latino fans. They have only one Black player, Mookie Betts, two fewer than in 1948.

But they also have have Dave Roberts, one of only two Black managers in baseball.

With the Dodgers, Roberts, the son of a Black father and Japanese mother, has become the second Black manager and the first of Asian descent to win a World Series, most recently doing so with the ascendant play of two Japanese superstars, pitcher/designated hitter Shohei Ohtani and pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

Latinos – or Hispanics, as designated in census figures – now represent almost 50% of the 3.9 million people who live in Los Angeles and almost 50%, of the 10 million people who live in Los Angeles County, according to the U.S. Census Bureau – and roughly 40% of the Dodgers fan base. Understanding that, Yamamoto, who was voted 2025 World Series MVP, delivered once more during the ensuing World Series celebration at Dodger Stadium.

“Buenas tardes,” he said, opening his speech with “good afternoon” in Spanish.

The crowd cheered with gusto.

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The final PGA Tour event before the Masters is set to conclude Sunday, April 5, in San Antonio with the winner potentially getting the last spot in the field at Augusta National.

However, Mother Nature may have other ideas.

Thunderstorms and heavy rain forced Saturday’s third round of the Valero Texas Open to be suspended as water pooled up on the greens and fairways. Golfers will need to complete the round Sunday morning before the final round can begin.

Robert MacIntyre held a two-shot lead at 15 under when play was suspended just before 1 p.m. ET on Saturday. MacIntyre finished six holes in his third round and was 1 under for the day. Ludvig Aberg sat in solo second overnight at 13 under.

How to watch Valero Texas Open

  • Golf Channel: 1-3:30 p.m. ET
  • NBC/Peacock: 3:30-6 p.m. ET
  • ESPN+: 10:15-6 p.m. ET
  • SiriusXM radio: 3-6 p.m. ET

2026 Valero Texas Open pourse, payouts

The total purse for the 2026 Valero Texas Open is $9.8 million. The winner will pocket $1.764 million, or 20% of the total purse. The payouts for each position:

  • 1. $1,764,000
  • 2. $1,068,200
  • 3. $676,200
  • 4. $480,200
  • 5. $401,800
  • 6. $355,250
  • 7. $330,750
  • 8. $306,250
  • 9. $286,650
  • 10. $267,050
  • 11. $247,450
  • 12. $227,850
  • 13. $208,250
  • 14. $188,650
  • 15. $178,850
  • 16. $169,050
  • 17. $159,250
  • 18. $149,450
  • 19. $139,650
  • 20. $129,850
  • 21. $120,050
  • 22. $110,250
  • 23. $102,410
  • 24. $94,570
  • 25. $86,730
  • 26. $78,890
  • 27. $75,950
  • 28. $73,010
  • 29. $70,070
  • 30. $67,130
  • 31. $64,190
  • 32. $61,250
  • 33. $58,310
  • 34. $55,860
  • 35. $53,410
  • 36. $50,960
  • 37. $48,510
  • 38. $46,550
  • 39. $44,590
  • 40. $42,630
  • 41. $40,670
  • 42. $38,710
  • 43. $36,750
  • 44. $34,790
  • 45. $32,830
  • 46. $30,870
  • 47. $28,910
  • 48. $27,342
  • 49. $25,970
  • 50. $25,186
  • 51. $24,598
  • 52. $24,010
  • 53. $23,618
  • 54. $23,226
  • 55. $23,030
  • 56. $22,834
  • 57. $22,638
  • 58. $22,442
  • 59. $22,246
  • 60. $22,050
  • 61 ..$21,854
  • 62. $21,658
  • 63. $21,462
  • 64. $21,266
  • 65. $21,070
  • 66. .$20,874
  • 67. $20,678
  • 68. $20,482
  • 69. $20,286
  • 70. $20,090
  • 71. $19,894
  • 72. $19,698
  • 73. $19,502
  • 74. $19,306
  • 75. $19,110